Wednesday, March 18, 2026

On the Hunt

Although there may be more snowy days and there’s still a bit of snow on the ground, winter’s over and spring's begun. Skunk cabbage is in bloom, geese call overhead – it certainly is spring.

The air was calm, the sun was bright, there were but a few clouds in the sky and the temperature was just about freezing – what a wonderful day to hunt for the red-headed woodpeckers once again.

A fallen tree provided great place to sit, just about the right height and with a small tree for a backrest. It wasn’t long before one of the red-headed woodpeckers that call this patch of woodland home landed on a nearby limb.

 


Drat, a few small branches kept the camera from focusing on the bird; it focused on the branches instead –


 

From that branch it flew up to the end of a dead limb on a tall tree and proceeded to drum on that resonant limb to claim its territory –



But a few moments later the woodpecker flew down to a small eastern hophornbeam tree and spent several minutes there –





And then off it went to land high on a far distant tree –


It was time to sit and wait for it to return, but something intervened.

That something was a mink approaching on a fallen tree –


This must have been the most fearless mink ever – and most mink are quite bold – because it just kept hunting for a meal as this photographer followed it –





pushing through clumps of dead grass, and exploring piles of fallen trees –




Until it alerted to prey and with a leap disappeared behind the log and didn’t emerge –


What a great day!!!
 

1 comment:

Thanks for visiting "In Forest and Field" and thank you especially for commenting. It's always interesting to see other peoples' thoughts. Unfortunately, due to spam and trolls (not the kind living beneath bridges), comments must now be approved before being posted.

Woody